Leaflets of the Russian Revolution: Socialist Organizing in 1917
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When workers and peasants rose up across Russia and smashed the centuries old Tsarist autocracy their actions reverberated across the world, and continue to inspire activists to this day. This carefully assembled and expertly translated collection of documents from the Petrograd socialist movement in 1917 provides contemporary readers with a firsthand glimpse into the revolutionary ferment as it unfolds.
In Leaflets of the Russian Revolution, Barbara Allen selects and introduces the pamphlets and other agitational material that give life to the debates, disagreements and perspectives that animated the masses during the revolution.
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Leaflets of the Russian Revolution - Haymarket Books
Praise for Leaflets of the Russian Revolution
"Leaflets of the Russian Revolution offers a street-level view of the unfolding of the Russian Revolution in ١٩١٧, especially in Petrograd. These well-translated leaflets are a rich source for understanding how activists brought to life seemingly abstract ideas like democracy, freedom, socialism, power, and revolution itself. The language of these texts is full of emotion, experience, and determination to change the world. The book also contains documents about the mobilization of Red Guards, trade unions, and other organizations. Barbara Allen’s introduction, annotations, and conclusion put this all in clear and essential context."
—Mark Steinberg, author of The Russian Revolution, ١٩٠٥–١٩٢١
Authentic human voices are what we hear in these leaflets from the Russian Revolution of 1917. The leaflets, emanating from different socialist parties and workers’ organizations, re-create all the vividness and excitement of contemporary debates, while the helpful introduction and notes provide the necessary historical context.
—Sheila Fitzpatrick, University of Sydney
This fascinating collection of leaflets from revolutionary 1917 permits readers to experience the immediacy and passion of revolutionary actors. As a collection of primary documents from a critical moment in world history, it is sure to be a valuable teaching resource.
—Diane P. Koenker, UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies
In this valuable volume, Barbara Allen furnishes all those interested in the Russian Revolution with an important collection of political leaflets reflecting the epoch-defining struggle for power in 1917 Russia. Allen’s fine translations and insightful introductions add to the value of the collection.
—Alexander Rabinowitch, author of The Bolsheviks in Power
An indispensable collection. These texts, and Barbara Allen’s expert curation and explication, bring to vivid life the astonishing tussles, turns, and transformations of 1917, Russia’s revolutionary year.
—China Miéville
The leaflets, nicely translated, take the reader into the fervent debates between Bolsheviks and Mensheviks during the 1917 Revolution. Allen pays particular attention to Alexander Shlyapnikov, a level-headed Bolshevik metal worker who was involved in party and union organizing. She also provides clear, comprehensive introductions to the materials. The result is a collection that goes beyond the party luminaries and into the ranks of lower-ranking activists. Most of these materials heretofore have been available only in Russian.
—Barbara Clements
"Leaflets were an important means of communication and propaganda in the Russian Revolution. This richly annotated and expertly translated
selection offers a vital and fascinating insight into a range of left outlooks as Bolsheviks, Mensheviks, SRs, and Interdistricters grappled with the major issues of the day, including the war and a deepening economic collapse. It crucially forefronts the aspirations of trades unions and workers, and illustrates how their hopes and dreams were lost in the Revolution’s survival. This primary source reader is essential reading for all students of the world historical event that was the Russian Revolution."
—Ian D. Thatcher, professor of history, Ulster University, UK
A fine collection of important leaflets from 1917 that present many of the key issues of the day, especially as they affected—and reflected—workers’ lives. It outlines the range of views and their evolution. It also focuses on the important, but often forgotten, Bolshevik leader Alexander Shlyapnikov.
—Rex A. Wade
Barbara Allen has produced a collection of sources that take us right to the heart of the great Russian political debate of 1917. The lifeblood of this debate was the political pamphlet, produced locally and addressing issues at short notice. They were the predecessors of today’s blogs and tweets. This fine selection gives us a penetrating insight into the fundamental fabric of the political and social revolution.
—Christopher Read, professor of modern European history,
University of Warwick, UK
Concerns of the streets and shop floors ring out in Barbara Allen’s illuminating collection of leaflets and appeals from 1917, Russia’s year of revolution. Newly available source material, chosen or written by Alexander Shlyapnikov, metalworker and first Soviet commissar of labor, portrays revolution as experienced by worker ranks. Allen’s book will stimulate specialists and open up a new world for the general reader.
—John Riddell
This short but invaluable book shows us the Russian Revolution not from the top, not from the bottom, but from the middle: from the party activists who wrote leaflets addressed to the workers the Bolsheviks needed to convince. The slogans come alive in these eloquent evocations of the Bolshevik message. Barbara Allen provides us with all we need to know in order to hear the impassioned voices of 1917.
—Lars T. Lih
Leaflets
of the
Russian Revolution
Socialist Organizing in 1917
Edited and Translated by
Barbara C. Allen
Haymarket Books
Chicago, Illinois
© 2018 Barbara C. Allen
Published by
Haymarket Books
P.O. Box 180165
Chicago, IL 60618
773-583-7884
info@haymarketbooks.org
www.haymarketbooks.org
ISBN: 978-1-64259-017-3
Trade distribution:
In the US, Consortium Book Sales and Distribution, www.cbsd.com
In Canada, Publishers Group Canada, www.pgcbooks.ca
In the UK, Turnaround Publisher Services, www.turnaround-uk.com
All other countries, Ingram Publisher Services International, intlsales@perseusbooks.com
This book was published with the generous support of the Wallace Action Fund and Lannan Foundation.
Cover design by Jamie Kerry. Cover image from a poster by by V. M. Briskin, reading, The press is a weapon of the Proletariat!
Library of Congress CIP Data is available.
To my sister Patricia Allen Rogers and all the other reference librarians
Contents
Preface
Notes about the Text
Part I: The Revolutionary Year 1917
Part II: The Political Struggle: Leaflets of Russian Socialist Parties and Soviets
To the Revolutionary Students of Russia
The Day of the People’s Wrath Is Near
Only a Provisional Government Can Bring Peace
For a Provisional Revolutionary Government of Workers and Poor Peasants
A Day to Prepare for Conquering the Enemy
For a General Strike against Autocracy
Soldiers, Take Power into Your Own Hands!
Joining Together to Achieve Peace
To Socialists Abroad: ‘For an International Socialist Conference’
Appeal to Soldiers: ‘Military Strength Serves the Cause of Peace’
The Bolshevik Proclamation Calling for a Demonstration
The All-Russian Congress of Soviets Proclamation Opposing a Demonstration
Protests Strike Blows against Our Brothers at the Front
Let the All-Russian Soviet Take All Power
Don’t Yield to Provocation
Slander Should Be Exposed
Part III: Arming Militants: Worker Militias and the Red Guard
Project for Party Militias Drawn Up by the Petersburg Committee of the RSDRP(b) in Mid-April 1917
Alexander Shlyapnikov, Worker Guard
Anonymous, About the Red Guard
A. Belenin (Alexander Shlyapnikov), About the ‘Red Guard’
Part IV: The Economic Struggle: Documents of the Petrograd Metalworkers’ Union
Resolutions of Petrograd Metalworkers’ Representatives about the Political and Economic Situation in Russia
Alexander Shlyapnikov, Our Wage Rates Agreement
Alexander Shlyapnikov, We Should Have Only One Union of Metalworkers
Alexander Shlyapnikov, Tasks of the Wage Rates Valuation Commissions
Alexander Shlyapnikov, Once More about the Organization of Unions
Alexander Shlyapnikov, About the Conference of the Metalworkers’ Union of Moscow Oblast
Part V: The Bolsheviks’ Post-Revolutionary Agenda for Workers
Alexander Shlyapnikov, To All Workers
Conclusion
Bibliography
Notes
Preface
This book began as a compilation of leaflet translations I published in a series, 1917: The View from the Streets, edited by John Riddell and copublished on his blog and the SocialistWorker.org website. The leaflet translations published here in part II feature some corrections and addenda to those published in the series. To contextualize the collection, I have added an introductory essay (part I) about the events of 1917 in Russia.
The leaflets represent the perspectives of socialist political parties and soviets; to round out these activist viewpoints, I have included additional documents from other forms of leftist worker organizations that convey the political and economic struggle for the improvement of workers’ lives. Part III offers several translations of key documents about organizing armed worker militias. Part IV contains selected translations of documents relating to building the Russian Metalworkers’ Union. Finally, a document in part V assesses the state of the workers’ movement immediately after the Bolshevik seizure of power.
This collection is not meant to be a comprehensive collection of documents representing a broad spectrum of forces and organizations that contributed to events in 1917.¹ Rather, it is intended to foster discussion about the historical roles of socialist parties, trade unions, worker militias, and workers’ and soldiers’ councils (soviets) in the Russian Revolution. Documents selected for this collection emerge from the Russian Social Democratic Workers’ Party (RSDRP) organizations of Bolsheviks and Mensheviks, the Party of Socialist Revolutionaries, the Social Democratic Interdistrict Committee (Mezhraionka), the Petrograd Soviet of Workers’ and Soldiers’ Deputies, the worker militias and Red Guard, and the Petrograd Union of Metalworkers.
As revolution began, both Bolsheviks and Mensheviks were opposed to imperialist war, but Bolsheviks sought a provisional revolutionary government while Mensheviks called for cooperation with liberals to create a democratic republic led by a provisional government. Distrusting liberals, Bolsheviks warned workers against making common efforts with them. Mezhraionka members wanted to unite the RSDRP Bolshevik and Menshevik factional organizations into a common front against the war and the autocracy. They warned workers not to allow liberals to draw them into patriotic demonstrations and organizations. By summer 2017, Mezhraionka folded into the Bolshevik Party. The Party of Socialist Revolutionaries (SRs) appealed to peasants and workers recently arrived from the countryside with a program calling for agrarian land reform, yet it did not have the centralized hierarchy characteristic of the Marxist RSDRP organizations. Therefore, SRs could be found taking a variety of political stances through 1917. By the end of the year, the party had split into left and right organizations. Left SRs aligned with the Bolsheviks to create a governing coalition after the Bolsheviks came to power. Right SRs and Mensheviks had proven willing to join liberals in the Provisional Government and were opposed to joining a government in which Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky held leading roles.
The soviets represented workers and soldiers who were united in socialist organizations. Until the fall of 1917, the Petrograd Soviet was dominated by moderate socialists like the Mensheviks who did not think the time right to contest bourgeois government rule. Worker militias originated during the February 1917 Revolution to keep order as police forces disintegrated. Bolsheviks and Mensheviks disagreed over whether the worker militias should maintain their original role or be transformed into revolutionary forces. Mensheviks worried about potential conflict between armed worker guards and regular military troops. Bolsheviks came to employ the term worker guard
to signify a more revolutionary force. By August 1917, red guards
had superseded worker militias. Mensheviks and other moderate socialists dominated the trade union movement, but unions such as the Metalworkers had parity between Bolsheviks and Mensheviks. Trade union organizers from all socialist factions worked together on practical questions around building unions, but differed on political strategies for taking power.
Throughout 1917, among all socialist organizations there was a great deal of flux in membership and political leanings, especially on the questions of which body or bodies should hold power and of which classes should compose ruling bodies. Moderate and radical positions were fluid in the context of the revolutionary moment. Some individuals who had been moderate were radicalized during the year, while others moved closer to liberal positions. Not only did revolutionaries migrate between moderate and radical views, but they sometimes held moderate and radical positions on different issues at the same time. Moreover, even in the most united groups and factions there were subtle differences in positions on discrete political issues. Finally, many socialists in and outside of trade unions considered themselves independent and free from factionalism.
The presence of Russian metalworker Alexander Shlyapnikov looms large in this collection. The most senior member of the RSDRP (Bolshevik) Central Committee on the scene during the February 1917 Revolution, chair of the Petrograd and All-Russian Metalworkers’ Unions, and the first Soviet Commissar of Labor, he was also a respected memoirist of the Russian Revolution, and the leaflets featured in part II, penned by various authors, are taken from the appendices to his memoirs. He also played a key role in drafting many of the other documents included in the collection.
***
John Riddell helped very much to improve the style of my leaflet translations, for which I am grateful. When I revised the leaflet translations, I paid heed to comments offered by those who read them on Riddell’s blog. Librarians at the Russian State Library in Moscow, the Van Pelt Library at the University of Pennsylvania, and La Salle University’s Connelly Library helped me work with newspapers. Timofey Rakov of the European University of St. Petersburg aided in photographing some articles. Brill gave permission to include an essay about 1917 in part I and the conclusion, both of which were extracted from my biography of Alexander Shlyapnikov.² I am thankful to my copy editor Brian Baughan, Nisha Bolsey, John McDonald, Rachel Cohen, Jamie Kerry, and others in the production team at Haymarket Books. As ever, my deepest gratitude goes to Alexander Rabinowitch for teaching me about the Russian Revolution and how to evaluate sources.
Notes about the Text
This book renders dates according to the Julian calendar, which Russia used in 1917. It ran thirteen days behind the Gregorian calendar that was observed in much of the rest of Europe and by the United States, and is in general use today. Russia switched to the Gregorian calendar in 1918.
Also, the book generally follows